The travel industry wants $150 billion for hoteliers and employees and $100 billion for suppliers due to coronavirus travel fallout.
Author: Chris Woodyard, USA TODAY
Carnival, Celebrity, Costa Cruises work to bring back stranded ships, get passengers home
Cruise lines including Celebrity, Royal Caribbean, Carnival and Costa all have ships at sea. Here’s an update on their efforts to bring them home.
Why the homeless, ‘surviving the best way they can,’ are vulnerable to coronavirus
Lacking access to basic sanitation and with many already beset with health problems, officials fear coronavirus could take a toll among the homeless.
Trump’s European travel restrictions take effect tonight. Here’s what you need to know
New travel restrictions take effect at midnight Friday. Here’s what to know if you or a loved one is abroad and trying to return to the United States.
No penalty? Hotel chains differ on cancellation fee policies around the coronavirus
Some major chains have announced they will waive cancellation fees, but it depends on where you’re going and when
Coronavirus fears are challenging public transit agencies across US. Is it still safe to ride?
Transit agencies have stepped up cleaning in hopes that passengers stick with them during the coronavirus outbreak. But is it safe to ride?
Her husband pointed a gun at Black Lives Matter group; LA District Attorney Jackie Lacey says he’s sorry
Video posted on social media shows a man at the door pointing a gun and warning demonstrators: “I will shoot you. Get off of my porch.”
Kobe Bryant’s helicopter engine did not fail, federal investigators say in preliminary NTSB report
The helicopter crash that killed Kobe Bryan, his daughter “Gigi” and seven others left the cockpit “highly fragmented” and in flames, the report said.
Self-driving big rigs coming soon? Waymo set to begin mapping interstates in Texas, New Mexico
Waymo, the self-driving vehicle division of Google parent Alphabet, is about to start mapping in Texas and New Mexico for self-driving big rigs.
Boeing’s new CEO vows to woo pilots back to 737 Max – a plane that he says will keep its name
CEO David Calhoun, in his first major remarks to reporters, expressed confidence in the troubled jet and vowed to fix Boeing’s culture